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Prentice Hall: Earth Science
Prentice Hall: Earth Science
EARTH SCIENCE
Tarbuck Lutgens
14 The Ocean Floor
14.1 The Vast World Ocean
1. Pacific Ocean
2. Atlantic Ocean
3. Indian Ocean
4. Southern Ocean
5. Arctic Ocean
The Vast World Ocean
Pacific Ocean
Atlantic Ocean
Indian Ocean
Southern Ocean
Arctic Ocean
Continental Margins
A continental margin is the zone of
transition between a continent and the
adjacent ocean basin floor.
In the Atlantic Ocean, thick layers of
undisturbed sediment cover the continental
margin. This region has very little volcanic
or earthquake activity.
Atlantic Continental Margin
14.2 Ocean Floor Features
Continental Margins
In the Pacific Ocean, oceanic crust plunges
beneath continental crust. This force results
in a narrow continental margin that
experiences both volcanic activity and
earthquakes.
14.2 Ocean Floor Features
Continental Margins
Continental Shelf
• A continental shelf is the gently sloping
submerged surface extending from the shoreline.
• Continental shelves contain important mineral
deposits, large reservoirs of oil and natural gas,
and huge sand and gravel deposits.
14.2 Ocean Floor Features
Continental Margins
Continental Slope
• A continental slope is the steep gradient that
leads to the deep-ocean floor and marks the
seaward edge of the continental shelf.
• A submarine canyon is the seaward extension of
a valley that was cut on the continental shelf
during a time when sea level was lower—a canyon
carved into the outer continental shelf, slope, and
rise by turbidity currents.
• A turbidity current is the downslope movement of
dense, sediment-laden water created when sand
and mud on the continental shelf and slope are
dislodged and thrown into suspension.
Submarine Canyons
14.2 Ocean Floor Features
Continental Margins
Continental Rise
• A continental rise is the gently sloping surface
at the base of the continental slope.
14.2 Ocean Floor Features
Mid-Ocean Ridges
A mid-ocean ridge is found near the center
of most ocean basins. It is an interconnected
system of underwater mountains that have
developed on newly formed ocean crust.
Seafloor Spreading
• Seafloor spreading is the process by which
plate tectonics produces new oceanic
lithosphere at ocean ridges.
• New ocean floor is formed at mid-ocean ridges
as magma rises between the diverging plates
and cools.
14.2 Ocean Floor Features
Mid-Ocean Ridges
Hydrothermal Vents
• Hydrothermal vents form along mid-ocean
ridges. These are zones where mineral-rich
water, heated by the hot, newly-formed oceanic
crust, escapes through cracks in the oceanic
crust into surrounding water.
14.3 Seafloor Sediments
Radiolaria
Foraminifera
14.4 Resources from the Seafloor
Energy Resources
Oil and natural gas are the main energy
products currently being obtained from the
ocean floor.
Gas Hydrates
• Gas hydrates are compact chemical structures
made of water and natural gas.
• Most oceanic gas hydrates are created when
bacteria break down organic matter in ocean-
floor sediments.
Gas Hydrates
14.4 Resources from the Seafloor
Other Resources
Other major resources from the ocean floor
include sand and gravel, evaporative salts,
and manganese nodules.
Sand and Gravel
• The offshore sand-and-gravel industry is second
in economic value only to the petroleum industry.
14.4 Resources from the Seafloor
Other Resources
Manganese Nodules
• Manganese nodules are hard lumps of
manganese and other metals (like cobalt, copper,
and iron) that precipitate around a small object.
Evaporative Salts
• When seawater evaporates, the salt increases in
concentration until it can no longer remain
dissolved. When the concentration becomes
high enough, the salts precipitate out of solution
and form salt deposits.
• The most economically important salt is halite—
common table salt.
Manganese Nodules